Yes, because the ancient Greeks used many of the same rules that we still use today regarding angles and circles.
Its true just got it wrong
falseee
the anser to this question is a trapiezuim as it could have right angles and its diagonals definatly do not bisect each other
The opposite of straight could be crooked, curved, turned, or bent. The opposite of straight (honest) could be dishonest, devious, or corrupt. The opposite of straight (slang for heterosexual) would be gay.
Yes, because the ancient Greeks used many of the same rules that we still use today regarding angles and circles.
Its true just got it wrong
falseee
Well, maybe this could give you a clue. Ancient greeks made their trading through and across the Mediterranean Sea.
The Greeks visited Delphi so they could get advise from the god Apollo.
yes they could if they wanted to but prefered to pray inside
Because they could, being gods of the ancient Greeks.
I believe it was the aztecs...but I could be wrong
The Greeks visited Delphi so they could get advise from the god Apollo.
Quadrilaterals do not bisect each other. They could in special cases. In parallelograms (types of quadrilaterals), the diagonals bisect each other.
There were no cars in the time of the Ancient Greeks. He could have drived a carriage of some sort.
Most slaves were barbarians (non-Greeks). On rare occasions, Greeks would be sold into slavery, but that was usually a violation of a cultural taboo.